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The AI productivity boom is not lifting all tech stocks. Instead, it's negatively impacting traditional software companies. The market is pricing this in, with software ETFs like IGV breaking down technically even before earnings reports reflect the anticipated decline in business.
For the first time, the high-multiple software industry faces a potential existential threat from AI. Even the possibility of disruption is enough to compress valuations, causing massive dispersion where indices look calm but underlying sectors are experiencing extreme rotation.
The recent software stock drawdown is not about poor current performance; many companies are still beating earnings. Instead, the market is pricing in a massive "terminal value risk" from AI, valuing companies as if they will decline in perpetuity, creating a historic disconnect between current fundamentals and long-term valuation.
AI's ability to generate software at near-zero marginal cost is erasing the scarcity premium that propelled software stocks for over a decade. This realization is causing a massive capital rotation out of software ETFs and into tangible, scarce assets like metals and commodities.
Just as inflation structurally broke the bull case for long-term bonds (TLT), the threat of AI disruption is causing a fundamental re-evaluation of software company valuations. Buying the dip in software ETFs like IGV may become a losing strategy as multiples compress permanently.
The downturn in software stocks isn't tied to current earnings. Instead, investors are repricing the entire sector, removing the premium they once paid for its perceived safety and stable, long-term contracts, which are now threatened by AI disruption.
The primary threat of AI to software isn't rendering it obsolete, but rather challenging its growth model. AI will make it harder for SaaS companies to implement annual price increases and will compress valuation multiples, creating stress for over-leveraged firms from the zero-interest-rate era.
The market's downturn in legacy SaaS isn't primarily about AI automating jobs within those companies. The core fear is that new competitors can now use AI to build feature-complete products at a fraction of the cost, creating intense pricing pressure and margin compression for incumbents.
The recent software stock wipeout wasn't driven by bubble fears, but by a growing conviction that AI can disintermediate traditional SaaS products. A single Anthropic legal plugin triggered a massive sell-off, showing tangible AI applications are now seen as direct threats to established companies, not just hype.
Wall Street believes AI is 'eating' software, causing stocks for giants like Salesforce and Oracle to plummet. AI tools like Anthropic's Claude Code, which can create software from simple prompts, threaten to undercut the value proposition of traditional Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) companies by democratizing and simplifying software creation.
The recent software stock sell-off is rooted in investors' inability to confidently price long-term growth (terminal value). While near-term earnings might be strong, the uncertainty of future business models due to AI is causing a fundamental reassessment of what these companies are worth.